ron2
Posted : 6/18/2006 7:15:50 PM
I read a study of the Adirondack coyotes. This woman tracked them by their scat and field observation. Coyotes hunt and they also scavenge other kills from wolves and other coyotes. They will then bury the remains and let them get a bit rancid, then come back for a nice, chewy, aromatic meal. Coyotes and wolves have an ability in their stomach to hold a bone until it is wrapped in hide, to be defecated later, without puncture. Though wild canids may suffer from perforation or bone impactions, there hasn't been much study or even noted instances of it to provide a data base. Wolves have a different structure in the head than dogs do. It is called the coronoid process, which can apply to any joint mobility mechanism but specifically is the shape and size of the mandibular hinge and how it fits into the zygomatic arch and the size of the massiter muscles, all of which determine how wide the jaw can open and what the bite strength is. That is, a gray wolf has the ability to snap a bone in two in one bite. The hinge of the wolf mandible looks like a triangle and the hinge of a dog mandible is a simple posterior recurve. That being said, there is some credence, I think, to the GITs being similar.
Dogs are scavengers and obviously, before my very eyes, hunters. I think there is some credence to balance over time. On his own, Shadow might eat a couple of mice, chew on some grass, raid some garbage can and eat leftover vegetables that were cooked with a roast because they have that meat flavor.
However, he does not live in the wild, or out and about, where could get killed by traffic, another animal, a farmer, or eating something rabid. I can see, though, with a live mouse, that most of his meal would be meat with whatever veggie or bug matter might be in the gut of the mouse. He is fast enough, thanks to his Sibe heritage, to bring down a small to mid-sized ungulate. I've seen him hit every bit of 30 mph more than once in the same run. In fact, I've seen him running so fast and trying to turn so quickly that he would slide on his face while his "right front disc brake" locked up and he spun around. I wish I had a video of that so that ya'll could split your sides laughing.
There are rabbits that live in some of the tree stands in the corn fields. Easy pickins', if I were to release him.